About: Ketonuria is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 719 publications have been published within this topic receiving 14628 citations. The topic is also known as: Acetonuria & urine ketones.
TL;DR: The mild yet persistent anomaly produced by the lowest effective streptozotocin dose, 25 mg/kg, exhibits characteristics resembling the state of chemical diabetes in humans and might thus warrant further study as a possible model.
Abstract: The relationship between the dose of intravenously administered streptozotocin (a N-nitroso derivative of glucosamine) and the diabetogenic response has been explored by use of the following indices of diabetogenic action: serum glucose, urine volume, and glycosuria, ketonuria, serum immunoreactive insulin (IRI), and pancreatic IRI content. Diabetogenic activity could be demonstrated between the doses of 25 and 100 mg/kg, all indices used showing some degree of correlation with the dose administered. Ketonuria was only seen with the largest dose, 100 mg/kg. The most striking and precise correlation was that between the dose and the pancreatic IRI content 24 hr after administration of the drug, and it is suggested that this represents a convenient test system either for both related and unrelated beta cytotoxic compounds or for screening for modifying agents or antidiabetic substances of a novel type. Ability to produce graded depletion of pancreatic IRI storage capacity led to an analysis of the relationship between pancreatic IRI content and deranged carbohydrate metabolism. Abnormal glucose tolerance and insulin response were seen when pancreatic IRI was depleted by about one-third, while fasting hyperglycemia and gross glycosuria occurred when the depletion had reached two-thirds and three-quarters, respectively. The mild yet persistent anomaly produced by the lowest effective streptozotocin dose, 25 mg/kg, exhibits characteristics resembling the state of chemical diabetes in humans and might thus warrant further study as a possible model. Finally, the loss of the diabetogenic action of streptozotocin by pretreatment with nicotinamide was confirmed and was shown to be a function of the relative doses of nicotinamide and streptozotocin and of the interval between injections.
TL;DR: The effects of late pregnancy on metabolic fuels, liver composition, gluconeogenesis, and nitrogen metabolism have been examined in fed and fasted rats as mentioned in this paper, showing that after a 48-hour fast, hepatic steatosis supervenes in gravid animals due to accumulated neutral fat.
Abstract: The effects of late pregnancy on metabolic fuels, liver composition, gluconeogenesis, and nitrogen metabolism have been examined in fed and fasted rats. Plasma free fatty acid (FFA) and immunoreactive insulin (IRI) are greater and glucose and ketones are lower in fed 19-day pregnant than they are in agematched virgin rats. A 48 hr fast elicits greater increases in FFA and ketones and more profound reductions in glucose in the pregnant rats and obliterates the differences in IRI. Fetal weight is not modified by such fasting but maternal weight losses exceed that of the nongravid rats. Livers from rats 19 days pregnant contain more and larger hepatocytes. Per mumole hepatic deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-phosphorus, water and protein are more abundant, whereas glycogen is unaffected. Livers from fed pregnant rats contain more lipid phosphorus and less neutral lipid fatty acid. After a 48 hr fast, hepatic steatosis supervenes in gravid animals due to accumulated neutral fat. The contents of hepatic acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) and citric acid are not different in fed pregnant and virgin rats but are greater in the pregnant rats after fasting. Formation of glucose-(14)C and glycogen-(14)C from administered pyruvate-(14)C are the same in fed pregnant and virgin rats, but greater in the pregnant ones after a 24 or 48 hr fast. Pregnancy does not affect creatinine excretion, and urinary urea is not different in fed pregnant, virgin, and postpartum animals. Contrariwise, more nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus are excreted by the pregnant animals during a 2 day fast. The increment in urinary nitrogen is due largely to urea on the 1st day, whereas heightened ammonia accounts for half the increase on the 2nd and correlates with the enhanced ketonuria. Muscle catabolism, gluconeogenesis, and diversion to fat are activated more rapidly and to a greater degree when food is withheld during late gestation in the rat. These catabolic propensities are restrained in the fed state. The capacity for "accelerated starvation" may confer survival benefit upon an intermittently eating mother in the presence of a continuously feeding fetus.
TL;DR: The fat cow syndrome refers to a combination of metabolic, digestive, infectious, and reproductive conditions which affects the obese periparturient cow which develops primarily due to faulty feed management which permits excessive consumption of unbalanced diets.
TL;DR: The risk for twins, milk fever, prolapsed uterus, displaced abomasum, ketonuria, and aciduria increased with parity, whereas that for stillbirth and metritis was higher in heifers than in cows.
TL;DR: The most powerful risk factor for microangiopathy was duration of diabetes, but frequency of both retinopathy and nephropathy was impressively related to the level of plasma glucose at the time of examination, which was independent of the effects of other variables.
Abstract: Indexes of retinopathy and nephropathy were studied in a large population of diabetics using standardized methods In each of 973 subjects, more than 100 other variables were also measured: this made It possible to take into account many confounding factors when we examined the relationships of these variables to microangiopathy The most powerful risk factor for microangiopathy was duration of diabetes, but frequency of both retinopathy and nephropathy was impressively related to the level of plasma glucose at the time of examination This latter relationship was independent of the effects of other variables Risk of retinopathy was also related to factors that were probably associated with higher previous plasma glucose levels—need for insulin therapy, history of ketonuria, present level of plasma triglyceride, leanness, and younger age of onset of diabetes In subjects with a systolic blood pressure of less than 170 mm Hg and who did not have proteinuria, no significant relationship was found between blood pressure and frequency of retinopathy, but, when the systolic pressure was greater than 169 mm Hg, rates of retinopathy were excessive, even In those subjects without proteinuria Several other factors had no significant relationship to retinopathy or nephropathy: these included age, level of education, smoking, and plasma cholesterol Rates of severe nephropathy were somewhat greater In men than in women, but this difference was not statistically significant Rates of retinopathy and of mild proteinuria were similar in men and women After adjustment for duration of diabetes, the risk of retinopathy was no higher in the 102 subjects with two diabetic parents than in the 254 who had no family history of diabetes